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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Outcomes of 18 dogs treated for kidney cysts by drainage

By Vagias, Michail et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2022·Department of Small Animal Surgery·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Perioperative characteristics, histologic diagnosis, complications, and outcomes of dogs undergoing percutaneous drainage, sclerotherapy or surgical management of intrarenal cystic lesions: 18 dogs (2004-2021).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old male crossbreed dog was treated for kidney cysts after showing signs of discomfort. The dog underwent several treatments, including sclerotherapy (using alcohol to shrink the cysts) and surgical deroofing, which is a procedure to remove the cysts. The sclerotherapy resolved 3 out of 11 cysts, while the deroofing resolved 3 out of 6 cysts. Unfortunately, some dogs experienced complications, and the tests showed that both benign and cancerous cysts were present, making it hard to tell them apart based on fluid tests alone.

People also search for: dog kidney cyst treatment · sclerotherapy for dog kidney cysts · dog kidney surgery recovery

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Canine intrarenal cystic lesions (ICLs) are infrequently reported in the veterinary literature. Several treatment options have been described including cyst fenestration (partial nephrectomy/deroofing) +/- omentalization, sclerotherapy using alcohol as a sclerosing agent, percutaneous cyst drainage (PCD), and ureteronephrectomy. Information regarding presenting clinical signs, physical examination findings, histologic diagnosis and outcomes of dogs with ICLs treated by different methods is limited. Medical records of 11 institutions were retrospectively reviewed to identify dogs that underwent PCD, sclerotherapy, surgical deroofing +/- omentalization, or ureteronephrectomy for management of ICLs from 2004 to 2021. Six weeks postoperative/post-procedural follow-up was required. Cases suspected to represent malignancy on preoperative imaging were excluded. The study objective was to provide information regarding perioperative characteristics, complications, and outcomes of dogs undergoing treatment of ICLs. RESULTS: Eighteen dogs were included, with 24 ICLs treated. Ten had bilateral. There were 15 males and 3 females, with crossbreeds predominating. PCD, sclerotherapy, deroofing and ureteronephrectomy were performed in 5 (5 ICLs treated), 7 (11 ICLs), 6 (6), and 7 (7) dogs, respectively, with 5 dogs undergoing > 1 treatment. Seven dogs experienced 8 complications, with requirement for additional intervention commonest. PCD, sclerotherapy and deroofing resulted in ICL resolution in 0/5, 3/11 and 3/6 treated ICLs, respectively. Histopathology identified renal cysts (RCs) in 7/13 dogs with histopathology available and neoplasia in 6/13 (4 malignant, 2 benign). Of 5 dogs diagnosed histopathologically with neoplasia, cytology of cystic fluid failed to identify neoplastic cells. Among 7 dogs with histologically confirmed RCs, 4 had concurrent ICLs in ipsilateral/contralateral kidney, compared with 2/6 dogs with histologically confirmed neoplasia. CONCLUSIONS: Benign and neoplastic ICLs were approximately equally common and cystic fluid cytology failed to differentiate the 2. Among renal-sparing treatments, deroofing most commonly resulted in ICL resolution. Presence of concurrent ICLs in ipsilateral/contralateral kidney does not appear reliable in differentiating benign from malignant ICLs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35718776/